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www.cirrusconsulnggroup.com/edu [email protected] 1-800-459-3413 How Your Dental Clinic Tenant Lease Could Make Or Break Your Rerement Plan

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Page 1: How your dental clinic tenant lease could make or break your … · 2019-10-09 · simply want to surrender the lease to their landlord have had to spend thousands of dollars restoring

www.cirrusconsultinggroup.com/edu [email protected]

1-800-459-3413

How Your Dental Clinic Tenant LeaseCould Make Or Break YourRetirement Plan

Page 2: How your dental clinic tenant lease could make or break your … · 2019-10-09 · simply want to surrender the lease to their landlord have had to spend thousands of dollars restoring

www.cirrusconsultinggroup.com/[email protected]

1-800-459-3413

Have You Considered the Impact Your TenantLease Could Have on Your Retirement Plans?

Dentists have long recognized the importance of location in establishing

and growing their practice. When the time comes to sell their business,

they know location matters just as much as a solid patient list and a

well-equipped clinic.

But in spite of their belief in the “location, location, location” mantra,

dentists often overlook a critical component that can have a tremendous

impact on their finances and retirement plan: their tenant lease. In fact,

83 per cent of all dentists have leases which can prevent them from

selling their practice, while 76 per cent could be forced to move their

practice any time their landlord wishes.

As a result, many dentists on the eve of retirement are surprised to learn

that, because of the terms of their lease, their practice is worth much

less than they had anticipated.

To make matters worse, about 20 per cent of landlords structure leases

that let them collect 20 per cent of proceeds when a practice is sold.

In some cases, retiring dentists who are not selling their practice but

simply want to surrender the lease to their landlord have had to spend

thousands of dollars restoring their clinic space to its original configura-

tions – because their lease required them to.

How do you ensure this doesn’t happen to you?

Structuring Your Lease for Retirement: 5 Effective Tactics

Don’t wait until it’s too late.

Ideally, you should structure your lease for

retirement many years before you plan to retire.

At Cirrus, we encourage our clients to take this

step around the age of 40.

Go for a long-term, flexible lease.

We recommend a 10-year term with an option

to renew for another 10 years.

Include an early retirement provision.

Insist on an early retirement clause stating that,

should you wish to retire early a few years into

the lease, you have the right to terminate the

agreement with notice.

Factor in death and disability.

Be sure your lease contains a death and disabil-

ity clause that will terminate the lease should

something happen to you. Without this clause,

your landlord could force you or your family to

continue paying rent even if you are no longer

able to practise.

Make sure your lease can be assigned.

Without a proper assignment clause, you could

find it difficult to sell your practice since your

landlord could deny permission to transfer your

lease or will agree to do so only at a much higher

rental rate.

Additional resources available at

www.cirrusconsultinggroup.com/edu

Call us toll-free

Still Have Questions?

1-800-459-3413